Profile: Andrew Romine hit .412 in the major leagues! Ahem, in 21 plate appearances. He's organizational depth, and if things go really well for Romine, he'll be a late inning glove, a left handed bat off the bench, or a pinch runner in 2013. Carry on. (Michael Barr)

Profile: 98 of Andrew Romine's career-high 123 plate appearances in 2013 happened at third base, after the Angels traded third base mainstay Alberto Callaspo in a rebuilding-mode move. With the offseason acquisition of David Freese, Romine looks to return to his reserve/defensive replacement role in 2014. It seems likely that he'll see fewer plate appearances in 2014. Even if he does get a fair amount of playing time, don't expect him to help your team's offense much. (Steve Staude)

The Quick Opinion: Don't expect Romine to get enough plate appearances to be a valuable contributor. Also, don't expect him to put up good numbers in whatever PAs he does get.

Profile: Over four seasons, the Angels gave Romine a total of 174 plate appearances. Well, the Tigers decided to up the ante and give him 100 more PA in one season alone. The final results could have been worse. He has never shown the ability to hit for power and he didn't for the Tigers (two homers and a .048 isolated slugging percentage). While he has put up an average over .280 the last three seasons at Triple-A, he only hit for .227 in the majors. His positive contribution came from his 12 stolen bases. It looks like he will get some plate appearances in 2015, as he is currently slated to be the Tigers' utility infielder. He is unrosterable at this point but could be a small source of steals if he pushed into a starting role because of injuries. (Jeff Zimmerman)

The Quick Opinion: Andrew Romine somehow played in 94 MLB games in 2014 and showed some fantasy usefulness by stealing 12 bases. That is where his talent display ended, with little chance for a 2015 repeat.

Profile: No matter how much the game changes, utility infielders pretty much stay the same. Romine logged time at six different positions including at least 13 games at four of them. While he played 13 more games overall in 2015 than 2014, he had 70 fewer plate appearances so at least the Tigers are deploying him optimally. Okay, that's wrong. Optimally, he would be used as a DF -- designated fielder -- but instead they actually let him play at designated hitter once. He generated all of his value in the field so he'll stick around as a utility infielder with the team again in 2016. Mike Aviles could squeeze him out of the role, but Aviles hasn't shown a positive bat since 2010 and doesn't have nearly the glove. Neither merits attention outside of 10-team American League Central only leagues. Don't tell Jeff about the 109 games! (Paul Sporer)

The Quick Opinion: Last year in this space, Jeff Zimmerman was (rightfully) amazed that Romine played 94 games in 2014, but wait until he learns that the Tigers needed him in 109 games last season. Normally a 68-point jump in OPS would mean at least a little something, but in this instance it meant a .622 OPS.